Rio Carnival 2018 second night: Glitzy parades tackle serious issues

Latin America's most famous carnival continued on Monday 12 February, with six more of Rio de Janeiro's elite samba schools parading through the specially-built Sambadrome in a dazzling display.

Although the processions are famous for their festive atmosphere, competition between samba schools is fierce. The parades are judged on elements such as choreography, atmosphere, organisation and singing.

Beija-Flor tackled gritty subjects such as crime, poverty, education, corruption and equality. The samba school's parade had a drag queen as its headliner. Pabllo Vittar has several videos with millions of hits on YouTube, including one, Todo Dia, that has attracted more than 216 million viewers.

Carnival has long been a place to celebrate sexuality and diversity. But Brazil also has some of Latin America's highest rates of violence against gay and transgender people, and Beija-Flor tackled intolerance against the LGBT community and others.